About Me

I am Salty The Beast. I am what you might call a Renaissance man, meaning I find interest in most every medium. I love watching movies, listening to music, writing music, playing video games, making videos, etc.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

MOVIE REVIEW: The Bourne Legacy

The first thing that may surprise viewers going into “The
Bourne Legacy” is that Jason Bourne has been completely relieved of his duties
as the main character. In the three previous entries in the film series (“The
Bourne Identity,” “The Bourne Supremacy,” and “The Bourne Ultimatum”), Matt
Damon acted as Bourne, a former contract killer for the CIA who had to
reassemble the shattered fragments of his past identity after acquiring a form
of retrograde amnesia. Instead of Bourne, we end up with Aaron Cross, a black
ops agent with a physical skill set great enough to rival his predecessor.
Aaron opens the film by diving straight to the bottom of a freezing lake at his
Alaskan training post to gather some special colored pills.

Aaron Cross is portrayed by Jeremy Renner, coming on the
heels of his supporting work in another action-thriller “Mission: Impossible –
Ghost Protocol,” and those pills he’s swimming for are imperative towards his
development into a first-rate agent. Every subject of Operation Outcome is administered
with a supply of blue and green supplements (suspiciously shaped like guitar
picks) to sharpen both their cognitive capabilities and their physical
dexterity. In other words, these tests subjects are being brought up to be
virtually unstoppable, just like Jason Bourne.

The CIA, meanwhile, is currently experiencing a crisis.
Following the events in “The Bourne Ultimatum” in which both the Treadstone
Project and Operation Blackbriar were exposed courtesy of Jason Bourne, several
CIA workers (including Joan Allen, Scott Glenn, and David Strathairn) are
yanked aside for FBI questioning. The head of CIA operations, Eric Byer (Edward Norton), orders that all action programs be terminated immediately. The agents
from all parts of the world are assigned with a new yellow pill that causes
death soon after ingestion.

To eliminate Cross, however, an entire missile is sent to
blow him (as well as the entire location) to smithereens. But do you think that
stops him? No way! After fishing the tracking device out of his body using
antiquated surgical techniques and fighting off some Alaskan wolves a la “The Grey,” Cross prevents the assassination of Marta Shearing (Rachel Weisz)
planned by a couple of the CIA’s hired guns.

Shearing is a lab technician for Steristyn Morlanta, the
research facility responsible for synthesizing the special drugs, which were
then dispensed to operatives. But just like everyone else, she is now a target
on the CIA’s “to kill”-list because of her knowledge and involvement with the various
Outcome programs. She’s also shook up from a recent traumatic occurrence
wherein a fellow scientist (Zeljko Ivanek) launched a massacre in the
laboratory. This sequence acts as the film’s most thrilling and provocative
moment, ably stirring up tension and mounting anxiety.

Cross and Shearing form a partnership with each other, and
much of the film is spent on getting pills so that Cross can “viral off,” or
permanently maintain the effects of the medications. This requires both of them
to make travel plans to Manila (as in, the capital of the Philippines), the
city in which the chemicals are contained. Though a simple change in geography
obviously won’t be enough to dampen Byers’ will to eradicate Cross and
Shearing.

In typical “Bourne” fashion, the plot isn’t particularly the
focus of the film and functions more as a tangled-up excuse to fasten together
action sequences. Fair enough. The action is well-done, kinetic and fast-paced;
just the way fans like it. The previous films in the series, as well as this
one, developed and achieved a happy medium in between the classy, sophisticated
espionage thriller (see “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy”) and explosive blockbuster
action entertainment (see “Mission: Impossible” series).

But boy, is it long-winded, considering the nearly
two-and-a-half hour running time and the deceptively simple goal (find pills,
power up). Frenetic and visceral as the action scenes may be, they can only
conceal the film’s lack of an agenda for so long. By the time the film’s biggest
setpiece arrives in the form of a motorcycle chase sequence through Manila, I
felt like I’d had enough thrillers for one day. As far as pacing goes, dull moments are a rarity. But in regards to plotting, it’s simultaneously
frustrating in its convolution and underwhelming in its minimalism.

“The Bourne Legacy” is far from the worst film of its type
playing in theaters right now, because let’s face it: as long as “Total Recall”
is making money, it won’t see much competition. But for a movie that almost
always feels exciting as it unfolds onscreen, it disappears from the mind
rather quickly and leaves the viewer with not much to take away. Similar to
cotton candy, it’s sweet while it lasts but seems like empty calories in
hindsight.